Administrative Core

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $2,155,683 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

The Administrative (Admin) Core is responsible for establishing, sustaining, and shaping the growth and development of the Center. The Core oversees: (1) Center strategic planning, (2) scientific leadership and oversight to ensure quality and productivity of the Signature, Exploratory (R34-size), and Pilot Feasibility (R03- size) research projects; (3) logistical and administrative support to the Center components, and (4) facilitation of a network of Consortium Partner stakeholders affiliated with the Center. Specific aims of the Admin Core are to: 1. Facilitate research on scalable and sustainable approaches to suicide prevention at justice intercepts (defined as places where behavioral health services can intercept a justice trajectory to change behavioral health [and justice] outcomes),1 addressing the #1 goal of the National Strategy for Suicide Prevention (to integrate care across systems within communities). 2. Foster synergy among research disciplines and cores and support research projects 3. Oversee solicitation, review, and selection of 4-6 additional innovative pilot studies that capitalize on center resources and extend the research program 4. Support training opportunities 5. Communicate the Center’s aims and activities 6. Oversee evaluation activities 7. Plan for sustainment of Center effects The Admin Core is assisted in these activities by a leadership team that is experienced in the administration of large, multi-component research programs, Center-dedicated administrative support, and a strong and diverse group of collaborators and Consortium Partners. Consortium Partners include governmental, practice, policy, and community partners (including individuals with lived experience and their families). The Center brings together health system, justice system, and suicide prevention communities, constituencies who do not regularly work together, to create novel solutions to a common problem. When system fragmentation is the crux of the problem, bringing all the key players together is a crucial first step, as highlighted in our unifying Center model (the Sequential Intercept Model). The Center will drive innovation by bringing together transdisciplinary expertise which does not usually co-exist to create synergies that would not exist without the Center to address suicide prevention at justice intercepts. The Center is tightly organized (Table 1), with timelines and milestones (Table 2), and a plan for accountability of and support provided to Center Cores and research projects. The goal is to change practice and policy for justice-involved individuals in order to contribute to near-term reductions in the U.S. suicide rate.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10909133
Project number
5P50MH127512-03
Recipient
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
JENNIFER E JOHNSON
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$2,155,683
Award type
5
Project period
2022-08-22 → 2027-07-31